Word: viewing
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Illustrations of the Romantic View of Life: Friedrich Schlegel; Novalis; Schelling and Caroline...
Those who chose to remain seated at the game last Saturday afternoon were greatly annoyed by a crowd of disorderly persons who kept up a continual promenade before the benches and shut off the view of the field. It was evident either that there were not enough policemen or that the officers who were there were not doing their duty. We noticed also that by the middle of the last half of the game the crowd had pressed down even to the lines of the field. This at any rate must be stopped, for it not only interferes with...
...worthy of attention, for it is evidence of the breadth of thought which now exists at Harvard, but which is likely to be misconstrued by outsiders. Harvard is essentially liberal in all its ideas. It is our most earnest wish to look at questions from all points of view, and in matters of religion as well as other subjects, we are consistent. This desire to cultivate a liberal spirit, to show that we respect the honest opinions of all men, leads us to ask if it would not be best to add to the list of our University preachers...
...second conference of the series on the study of the Pible takes place this evening. The Bible will be studied from a literary point of view, and there is perhaps no one in the University better prepared to speak on this subject than Professor Kittredge who of late years has devoted much zealous study to his subject after having spent years in preparation. The course has been given in answer to a universal demand for more critical knowledge of the Bible. Whetner the interest in the subject is as advanced here as in some other parts of the country will...
...thought to such truths might nevertheless have them inborn in him. Locke's belief that there were no innate ideas and his horror of anything mystical was the natural sequence of this. Professor Royce then considered the historical consequences of the controversy from a direct and indirect point of view...